Performance

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Current

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Current

Streams

Current

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Current

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Top Releases

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A Fantasy Love Affair

4.1M streams

4,129,568

Snap

2.6M streams

2,555,783

Snap (Expanded Edition)

2.6M streams

2,555,783

Free (Sean Finn Radio Edit)

497K streams

496,983

Get Funky With Me - The Best Of The TK...

376.6K streams

376,550

Back to the Front

85.2K streams

85,239

Back to Front (Expanded Edition)

85.2K streams

85,239

Boom

23K streams

22,984

Dancing All Alone

3.8K streams

3,763

Dancing All Alone: You Can Get Through...

2.7K streams

2,657

Biography

Peter Brown came to fame in 1977 with gold-selling 12" disco single, "Do Ya Wanna Get Funky with Me." A pioneer in home recording, he recorded his seminal hit in his bedroom -- as shown on the cover of Get Funky with Me: The Best of the TK Years -- and was, at one point, a spokesman for ARP Instruments. After he scored his seventh and final Top Ten Billboard club hit, he co-wrote Madonna's "Material Girl," a number two Hot 100 hit released in late 1984. Born July 11, 1953 in Blue Island, Illinois, Brown started playing drums in his teens and later began experimenting with his four-track reel-to-reel tape recorder in his bedroom studio. The singer, keyboardist, and producer was signed to Drive Records, a subsidiary of Henry Stone's TK Records. His first album for the label, A Fantasy Love Affair, was produced by Cory Wade, who had helped Brown get the record deal. The percolating "Do Ya Wanna Get Funky with Me" went to number three Black Singles and number 18 Hot 100 on Billboard's charts in summer 1977. Follow-up single "Dance with Me," for which Betty Wright provided background vocals, was even more of a success from a crossover standpoint; it peaked at number eight on the Hot 100. Another Drive LP, Stargazer, yielded the number four club hit "Crank It Up (Funk Town), Pt. 1." His 1983 RCA LP, Back to the Front, was highlighted by the number six club single "Baby Gets High." Brown's 1984 Columbia LP, Snap, featured the charting singles "They Only Come Out at Night," "(Love Is Just) The Game," and "Zie Zie Won't Dance." He wrote songs for a few artists, including Madonna and Agnetha Fältskog, but tinnitus cut his career short. He subsequently went into the fields of design and architecture. ~ Ed Hogan, Rovi